This blog is about my new Civil War history, Our War: Days and Events in the Fight for the Union.

Friday, June 27, 2014

Occupying Richmond (part three)

This drawing from the April 22, 1865, cover of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper is fanciful. Capt. George A. Bruce
of the 13th New Hampshire Volunteers requisitioned the carriage Lincoln rode in. In his account, excerpted here,
he wrote that it was not an open barouche and that the streets were empty when Lincoln rode through Richmond.

Capt. George A. Bruce of the 13th New Hampshire rode across the
bridge from Rockett’s Landing into Richmond proper beside his division
commander, Brig. Gen. Charles Devens. “The feeling of gratitude in the breasts
of the freedmen” overwhelmed them. Former slaves gave them “such a welcome as
king or conqueror never knew.” Devens’s eyes filled with tears and his voice
quavered as he said to Bruce: “This is a great sight for us to behold – the
deliverance of a race.”

Postwar photo of George A. Bruce

When the column reached Main Street, all bands were called
to the front, and the men paraded to “Yankee Doodle” and “Rally round the Flag.”
The refrain “Down with the traitor and up with the stars” stirred every Union
heart. Heading toward Capitol Square they marched to “Battle Cry of Freedom.”

On Capitol Street, Devens’s brigade moved back to the front
and stacked arms. “Sweeter music never reached the human ear than the rattling
of those Union muskets on the pavements of Richmond as they dropped upon the
ground,” Bruce wrote.

For all the thrill of triumph, the troops had marched into a calamity. Residents fled their burning homes and carried whatever they
could to the square. Black and white men, women and children of all ages
crowded together with their sofas, carpets and beds, their toys and mirrors,
pots and pans strewn around them. The sick lay on makeshift beds.

The fire seemed to strengthen the wind, and wind carried cinders from one rooftop to the next. It was “blowing like a hurricane,” Bruce
wrote. The heat and smoke made it hard to breathe. Above the fury on the
Capitol lawn stood George Washington on horseback. The city had dedicated the
majestic sculpture by Thomas Crawford three years before Virginia seceded from
the Union. As Bruce watched, firebrands – burning chunks of wood – thumped
against it.

Anarchy ruled the city. No one organized an effort to put
out the fire. Mobs fought for food wherever they could find it. Shoulder to
shoulder with white people, freed slaves joined in, eager to feed themselves and test their
liberty. Their doors flung open, convicts walked out of jail and prison. Looters
first raided the standing buildings nearest the fire and moved away as the
flames approached.

Brig. Gen. Godfrey Weitzel, commander of Bruce’s division,
set up inside the Capitol. Brig. Gen. George F. Shepley, who had been the first
colonel of the 12th Maine Volunteers, was appointed military governor. Devens
took command of the troops in the city.

Edward H. Ripley (1862 photo)

But the man charged with restoring order in Richmond was
a 25-year-old brevet brigadier general from Vermont named Edward H. Ripley. “No
one better fitted for such an important and delicate task could have been found,”
wrote Bruce. He described Ripley as “a scholar, a gentleman in the true sense
of the word, and a soldier of much experience and proved courage. Tall,
possessed of a fine figure and an open and attractive countenance, with an eye
that beamed with kindness and inspired confidence, he possessed a maturity of
judgment beyond his years.”

The Union men worked as a team. Soldiers gathered all the
fire engines they could find and fought the fire. They organized a police force
and posted sentinels on every street. By noon, printers from the ranks were producing
circulars announcing temporary rules to meet the crisis. Only soldiers
needed to protect the public and property were allowed inside city limits.

By nightfall the fires were dying out. Because the
streetlights were not lit, the stars shone bright. Capt. Bruce walked alone for
hours through “that proud but conquered capital, past the
luxurious abodes of wealth then knowing the first pangs of hunger, past doors
where had proudly entered, and as proudly departed, great military heroes, the
tread of whose armies had made the continent to tremble and filled the world
with their fame, past homes but yesterday tenanted by the rulers of an empire,
now fleeing to escape the threatened punishment of their acts.” He walked “through
narrow lanes and filthy alleys where dwelt the sons of toil upon whose humble
roofs the calamities of the war had fallen with a double stroke, consigning
fathers and sons, with all the savagery of an unpitying fate, to their untimely
graves.”

The next day, April 4, at about 3 p.m., Bruce was resting on
the steps of the governor’s mansion. The wife and daughter of Gov. William
“Extra Billy” Smith were upstairs with a female friend whom the advance of the Union army had trapped in Richmond. Shouting in the streets drew nearer
and nearer. Smith’s daughter came to the window and asked Bruce what was going
on. He went to find out.

On the other side of the house he saw President Lincoln in
the road with his son Tad, sailors guarding them on all sides. “The uproar was
caused by thousands of freedmen who thronged about and followed their
emancipator,” wrote Bruce.

When he told Miss Smith what he had seen, she disappeared from
the window without a word. A note from Devens at Jefferson Davis’s house asked
him to bring a carriage and come meet Lincoln, who was holding an informal
reception. Afterward Lincoln, Tad, Devens and Admiral David Porter entered the
carriage and rode off with 25 officers galloping along. The streets were empty
in town, but a quarter mile out carriages and hacks had gathered to see the casket
of Confederate Lt. Gen. A.P. Hill placed in a hearse. Hill had been killed at
Petersburg.

The Crawford statue of George Washington. in Richmond's Capitol Square

Lincoln’s carriage also stopped in Capitol Square to see
Crawford’s statue. The sculptor has Washington facing west and pointing a baton
in that direction. Lincoln gazed at the statue and said, “Washington is looking
at me and pointing to Jeff Davis.” On the way to Porter’s ship he stopped again
to look upon the ruins of Richmond.

From Bruce’s perspective, Richmond changed utterly the
moment it ceased to be the capital of the Confederacy. Men in rebel uniforms no
longer walked the streets. In Libby Prison and Castle Thunder, Union soldiers jailed the 2,000 rebels who did not
retreat with their army. Visitors “poured into
Richmond to see something of war now that it was ended.” Bruce calculated there
were enough members of the U.S. Congress to hold a session in the former Confederate
capitol.

Vice President Andrew Johnson: big talk, no action

Bruce was assigned to record the proceedings of criminal
trials. A commission was trying a man for murder in the Senate chamber one day
when Vice President Andrew Johnson and former senator Preston King of New York walked
in. The court recessed to greet them.

Johnson sat beside Bruce and began to rail against the men
who had started the rebellion. What he most feared, he said, was the tender
heart of President Lincoln. “If I was president, I would order Davis, Lee,
Longstreet and all the most prominent leaders before a military commission,
and, when convicted of treason, they should be hung,” he said, pounding the
desk with his fist.

“Nine days later he was president of the United States,”
Bruce observed, “and not one of them was even tried.”

News of Lee’s surrender reached Richmond on April 10. Bruce
applauded the restraint of northern leaders – Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, Sen.
Charles Sumner, Lincoln – in limiting the celebration, lest they offend former
Confederates, now fellow citizens again. “The spirit of Lincoln, ‘With malice
towards none, with charity for all,’ has gradually won over all feelings of
enmity and distrust, and become national,” Bruce wrote.

Two months passed before the day Bruce had been longing for.
“Never can I forget that pleasant morning in June when, in obedience to orders
from the War Department, in company with three New Hampshire regiments, I
embarked on board a steamer at Richmond for our homeward-bound voyage to
Boston. . . . We sailed down Virginia’s imperial river to the ocean, and saw
for the last time her blue hills fade away in the distance. I began to
experience that strange sensation of awe and uncertainty that comes over one as
he stands on that mysterious borderland between one sharply contrasted mode of
life and another.”